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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
On demand. European background of American history, establishment of European settlements and institutions, emergence of colonial culture, conflict between France and England for the New World.
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3.00 Credits
On demand. Causes, course and consequences of the movement for independence in colonial British North America. Detailed analysis of strategies and campaigns of the War for Independence and of the development of state and national constitutional republicanism.
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3.00 Credits
Fall. Development and growth of American social, political and economic institutions from the ratification of the Constitution to the Mexican War. Topics include the emergence of new ideologies of race and gender, the market revolution, slavery and the Old South, antebellum religion and reform.
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3.00 Credits
Spring. Political, economic and cultural conditions during the War; resulting problems to peoples and governments of both sections continuing through postwar period.
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3.00 Credits
On demand. How and why the United States was transformed into an urban-industrial society and the consequences of this transformation for American culture, society and politics. Approved for Distance Ed.
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3.00 Credits
On demand. Why and how the U.S. became a great, and then a global power. The new "associational" state, World War I and World War II, consumer culture, the "new" woman, the Great Depression. Applicable to the BG Perspective (general education) social sciences requirement.
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3.00 Credits
Fall, Summer on demand. History of African descendants in the United States, focusing on social, political and cultural issues pertinent to the African American experience, from the African background to the present. Applicable to the BG Perspective (general education) cultural diversity in the United States requirement.
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3.00 Credits
On demand. Development of constitutional law and institutions from the framing of the Constitution in 1787 to the present, with special attention to issues of federalism, civil rights and liberties, government regulatory authority and the role of the Supreme Court.
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3.00 Credits
Fall alternate years. United States' emergence as a world power from the expansion of the late nineteenth century to World War II, with attention to political, economic, and cultural components of U.S. foreign policy during this period.
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3.00 Credits
Spring. U.S. response to international problems since WWII with emphasis on the Cold War rivalry with the Soviet Union and China, the rise of the Third World, the wars in Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf, and U.S. involvement in Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and Africa.
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